• Top Buyer Cargill Exits the Mombasa Tea Auction after 40 Years | Tea Importers Oppose Pakistan’s Minimum Retail Price | Nonprofit True Pricing Releases Food and Beverage Report

    Top tea buyer Cargill Kenya has been winding down its annual 60,000 metric tons of tea purchases at the Mombasa Tea Auction for some time. A corporate memo laments the loss of Unilever and clients like Van Rees and recommends closing the trade desk and six warehouses after 40 years. It is a strategic move driven by lower commodity prices globally. With a $160 billion turnover, US-based Cargill reported a $17 billion decline in yearly sales in May. | Tea importers in Pakistan are resisting the imposition of a Minimum Retail Price as the base for payment of sales tax, which, at 18%, adds Rs 216 per kilo to the cost of bulk tea. Importers want the tax applied to the import value as a raw product. | The Netherlands-based nonprofit True Price Foundation released a food and beverage report for retail and food service, making the business case for calculating and transparently communicating the hidden costs to people and the environment for producing food.

    Tea News for the week ending 13 December 2024

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    Cargill Beverages
    Cargill Beverages

    Top Buyer Cargill Exits the Mombasa Tea Auction

    By Dan Bolton

    Cargill Kenya, Ltd., the largest buyer at the Mombasa auction, announced it will cease trading tea after 40 years.

    The company purchases approximately 60,000 metric tons annually, which gives it a 15% to 20% market share at the weekly auction. The annual trade value ranges from $180 to $210 million. Sales have declined in the past year following the sale of Unilever’s tea properties to Lipton Teas & Infusions. Cargill also manages six Mombasa warehouses with a combined capacity of 20,000 metric tons.

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  • US Climate Commitment Questioned at COP29 | Argentina’s Tea Harvest is Off to a Good Start | FAO Food Outlook Reveals Rising Coffee and Tea Prices

    US Climate Commitment Questioned at COP29 | Argentina’s Tea Harvest is Off to a Good Start | FAO Food Outlook Reveals Rising Coffee and Tea Prices | PLUS | Kurush Bharucha is among the foremost tea tasters in the world and a brilliant teacher. He shares his tasting insights in the latest Tea Journey Taster’s Profile. Read more…

    Tea News for the week ending 15 November 2024

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    India Tea News
    India Tea News | Aravinda Anantharaman
    COP29 Baku, Azerjaijan
    COP29 Baku, Azerjaijan

    US Climate Commitment Questioned at COP29

    By Dan Bolton

    US plans to withdraw from the 2015 Paris Agreement were viewed as a setback this week as delegates assembled in Baku, Azerbaijan, to attend COP29.

    The annual gathering sponsored by the United Nations seeks to coordinate efforts to reduce global warming due to greenhouse gas emissions. The world is on track to once again set a record as the hottest on Earth in modern times. For the first time, average temperatures will exceed 1.5 degrees Celsius of warming compared to pre-industrial times.

    According to the New York Times, scientists say nations must cut emissions by 40% by the end of this decade. Instead, global greenhouse gas emissions soared to a record 57 gigatons last year.

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